MEMBER LOGIN




Search First Things

Advanced Search

RSS

Icons & Curiosities
Archives

Categories

Monthly



Tuesday, August 11, 2009, 8:00 AM
Joseph Bottum

A cartoon, via the Language Log:

NatureVacuum


Monday, August 10, 2009, 4:00 PM
Sally Thomas

No high art here, just a miscellany of lovely little things, such as I might actually have in my actual house (beneath the current avalanche of cross-shaped coffee tables and recliners and dangly lamps and kapok pillows).

Here’s another little gilt triptych, very much like the one which lives on my mantel. This isn’t a fine piece, particularly, but it’s probably old-ish (mine, I imagine, dates from some trip my great-grandmother took in the early part of the 20th century), and is pretty. Bidding ends August 12.

There are a number of examples of the School of Cuzco Painting (La Esquela Cusquena) floating about the eBaysphere at the moment. This one I believe is the work of a contemporary artist, but not having known much about this kind of painting before, I’m interested in the possible parallels between painters doing this kind of work, and the work of iconographers in the Eastern Church.

Here’s another.

Speaking of Russian icons . . . This isn’t a bargain item, but it’s beautiful.

Another wish-list-type non-bargain.

This on the other hand is a bargain, and would go nicely with that Bible stand Jody was saying yes to not long ago.

Here’s something: a 17th-century French Jesuit medal from the early New World fur trade.

Or how about a vintage holy-water bottle?

I’m always interested in estate lots of medals, rosaries, crucifixes, and so on. The odds are that a batch like this one won’t contain any real treasures, but this is a way to pick up, cheaply, a grab bag of the kinds of things I like to slip into people’s stockings at Christmas, into birthday presents, maybe even into Halloween bags, if I had enough medals for all our trick-or-treaters. Never too early to start thinking about these things. And as I believe I’ve said before, I can’t resist random stuff.

Another likely-looking grab bag.

A vintage nun doll

Here’s the hymnal I grew up with. I’ve turned into a Gregorian-chant kind of girl, but I still love to sing these old hymns.

More pretties for your wall.

More nice stocking-stuffers: vintage Little Golden Books. Okay, so it’s August and you don’t want to think about stockings, but I’m telling you, the time will get away from you. And anyway, this stuff’s for sale now.

I always think these are sort of remarkable.

The altar boy in my life would love these. No kidding. Now, if I could only find him a shirt with French cuffs to wear under the cassock and cotta . . .

One for my window.

The altar boy also has a pocket watch. Hmm. His birthday’s in November . . . you might have to beat me to this.

Finally, another one for the Sunday-night hymn sing.

Happy shopping, gentle reader. If you ever actually buy something, by the way, I for one would love to know about it.


Monday, August 10, 2009, 11:39 AM
Joseph Bottum

Via Jonah Goldberg, the angry mob playset!
41Q3W9q8dPL._SS500_
So many uses for the homeschooling parent!

Rating: 50 out of 100


Monday, August 10, 2009, 8:00 AM
Sally Thomas

. . . as a sort of baptized feng shui would get to me, too, after a while, I think.

This cruciform decorating mania of Jody’s reminds me somehow of a day I spent in Little Walsingham years ago. This Norfolk village, as you may or may not recall, rejoices in the title of “England’s Nazareth,” owing to an apparition of the Blessed Virgin to a Saxon lady called Richeldis several years before the Norman Conquest. In this apparition, Our Lady invited the Lady Richeldis to join her for a tour of the home in Nazareth wherein Our Lord spent His childhood, and then suggested that she build an earthly replica of the Holy House right there in Walsingham.

Some confusion ensued regarding the situation of the Holy House; they kept trying to build it on what was eventually declared to be the wrong spot, owing to the building’s obdurate determination to fall down, no matter what — I’m reminded of the king in Monty Python and the Holy Grail whose castle kept sinking into the swamp. At last they tried another site, denoted if memory serves me by either the absence of dew on a dewy morn, or the presence of dew on a dry one, and the building more or less built itself, with the help of angels, and stayed standing, with attached priory, through hundreds of years of pilgrimages, until the dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII. The shrine, which also featured a holy well, was the second most-visited pilgrims’ destination in medieval England, after Canterbury.

If I’ve related this legend flippantly, it’s not because I don’t love the story. I do. I also take at least some apparitions seriously, and this by all accounts was one of the serious ones. There is no part of this tale which I am not prepared to believe. Still, my first encounter with the modern pilgrimage site was undertaken more in the tone of Monty Python than anything else.

Perhaps because I was still in my ironic-distance phase with regard to religion; perhaps because going on pilgrimage had been my husband’s idea and I’ve never been that gifted at humoring people; perhaps because we were traveling in company with a 2-year-old who distinguished herself in the pilgrims’ cafeteria at the Anglican shrine by dumping a virulently red gelatin-and-whipped-topping dessert all over herself and the table in front of her, to the polite but evident dismay of a number of cardigan-wearing ladies; perhaps because we were there on the day before the National Pilgrimage and, faced with the choice of either getting out and back to London or sleeping on a park bench with the aforementioned child, proceeded to miss the last bus out of town because we’d waited on the wrong side of the street — anyway, let’s just say that the first time around, I did not fall under the spell of Walsingham.

In fact, it grated on me. All those icon shops. All the Pilgrims’ This and Pilgrims’ That. All those people tiptoeing up and down — I’m sure they weren’t really tiptoeing, but Walsingham felt to me like the kind of place where people did tiptoe and speak in whispers, even in the street. The Anglican shrine left me unmoved; after the quiet of the ruined priory, which I did rather love, the new shrine struck me as garish and –overreaching? I didn’t succumb to its persuasions, at any rate.

little_walsingham_00019Anyway, after missing the bus, we were schlumping around the town, trying to think how to get out of there and back to Norwich, where we could catch the London train. Already the National Pilgrims, many of them barefoot and possibly tiptoeing and whispering, were beginning to stream through the streets. The 2-year-old was dragging at my arm and grousing. We turned into the very street pictured here, and a few paces down, we encountered a strange pair of houses, facing each other across the lane. One of them featured, in a little rounded niche above its door, a head of Charles I in high relief. In the front window of the other, a collection of Buddha figures had been arrayed: big ones, little ones, yellow ones, green ones, blue ones, all of them smiling serenely and paunchily back at the unfortunate monarch.

Now, even as an Episcopalian I was never a Buddhist. Not remotely. But I tell you truly: those Buddhas were the best thing I saw that day. They made me laugh. As I said to my husband, if I’d lived in Walsingham, I think I might have been tempted to put Buddhas in my window, too, because there’s such a thing as too much of a good thing.

But why should I think so? Well, in those days, I thought that there was such a thing as too much belief: the far side of a fine line which admitted things like a taste for beautiful music and liturgy, good art, even devotion to Mary and the saints, as long as that devotion didn’t spill over into, say, nightlights or giving up birth control.

The all-inclusive irony which Jody observes is a response to faith in its material manifestations which I’ve not only observed but experienced. What it boils down to, I think, is a smirky withholding of the self from God, or, as Jody points out, an attempt to suggest, simultaneously, the power and powerlessness of the Cross. That is, the Cross as a symbol has the power — “metaphysical and religious” or “historical and political,” as Jody puts it — to evoke visceral responses from all kinds of people. Thus an Episcopal campus chaplain with whom I once spent an hour could react, in a startling epiphany of disgust, to the cross on the front of her own chapel as “a symbol of oppression.” On the other hand, if — despite all its power as an idea — the Cross has no power over you, personally, then clearly you’ve got no problem with a cross-shaped Scando-La-Z-Boy.

I should note that I’ve been back to Walsingham several times since then, in quite different frames of mind. It no longer grates on me as it once did, though I’m still not a fan of the Anglican shrine, and the Buddhas, the last time I saw them, still made me laugh. All I can say is that my relationship with piety has evolved somewhat since that long-ago day. I haven’t yet visited the Catholic shrine; someday I will.

On the other hand, irony dies hard. So decorate my house all you want, but now you see what you may be driving me to. Not Buddhism, but Buddhas. Lots and lots and lots of Buddhas . . .

And while you’re busy picking out cruciform furnishings for me, don’t forget the I&C Church Challenge. I’m not going to forget about it. It’s not going away.

Also, in much the same vein, Spengler is looking for examples of prayer aberrations, as in the substitution of “Heavenly Parent” for “Heavenly Father,” creative names for the Holy Trinity, and the like. If you know of any, send them along to him.

Finally, Sir Walter Ralegh’s “Walsinghame.” The place survived as a “holy land” in the Elizabethan imagination, though only as a point of departure, which seems apt on all kinds of levels . . .


Friday, August 7, 2009, 8:00 AM
Sally Thomas

Lest anyone think that Fridays in my house are all dolor and sacrifice and Filet-O-Fish sandwiches, let me say a few words now about homemade ice cream. Among other things.

First let me say that until about two weeks ago, I’d never made ice cream. When my husband and I married, nearly twenty years ago now, we managed to acquire all kinds of useful and decorative items, but we did not get an ice cream maker.

Since that day, our fortunes have been such that an ice cream maker, while always an object of desire, never made it very far up the budget ladder. The transmission would fall out of the car, or we would move or have a baby or both at the same time, and thoughts of homemade ice cream would retire to that back room of our minds reserved for trips to Hawaii and a lifetime supply of Rice-A-Roni, the San Francisco Treat.

Recently, however, we were in Memphis, clearing a sofa and some tables and lamps and a rug and other miscellaneous possessions of ours out of my mother’s garage. To portage the lot back to North Carolina we hired a ten-foot U-Haul trailer, and even after we’d filled it with furniture, there was plenty of room left over.

“Well,” I said to my mother. “Got anything you want to get rid of right now?”

She couldn’t think of a thing, not one thing, other than a crockpot, a box of wooden building blocks, some flower pots, a few winter-hardy ferns out of the yard, and her ice-cream maker for which, as she said, she no longer had any pressing need.

This ice cream maker is a 70s-vintage Dolly Madison Pacer, from the J.E. Porter Company (A Division of Stenning Industries, Inc.: A Century of Quality Manufacturing). It’s not a hand-crank model, but the type with a motorized dasher. Well might Stenning Industries, Inc., lay claim to A Century of Quality Manufacturing, because amazingly, contra the experience of friends who’ve owned and discarded a series of automatic ice-cream makers, the motor on this one hasn’t burned out.

So. Now we can make ice cream. On our return from Memphis, the Visiting Graduate Student’s sister passed through town on her way home from the l’Abri Fellowship near Boston, and as she was still in l’Abri-worker mode, she made dinner for us. My contribution was this homemade apricot-mango ice cream, an adaptation of a peach ice-cream recipe:

3 pints heavy cream

2 cups sugar

about 8 apricots, blanched, skinned, and mashed

some diced fresh mango (Not sure how much I actually used. My mangoes were not very ripe and resisted peeling and dicing. Also, as I discovered –probably the rest of the world knew this already — mangoes don’t respond that well to blanching).

You warm the cream and sugar together until the sugar dissolves into the cream. Don’t boil! Chill the cream-sugar solution, then add the also-chilled fruit puree and the mango chunks. If I’d had a food processor, I would have pureed the mango, too, but mine was way too firm to respond to mashing with a potato masher, much to the chagrin of the 7-year-old, who was doing the mashing.

Chill this whole concotion in a mixing bowl (if it’s not chilled enough already), then transfer to your ice-cream freezer and follow manufacturer’s directions.

I actually doubled the original peach ice-cream recipe, and the resulting mixture filled my freezer’s cannister just over halfway, leaving plenty of room for expansion during the dashing-and-freezing process.

It was wonderful, just the right balance of tart and sweet and rich. The mango was much better in frozen chunks than it had been raw or blanched. And nobody says you can’t eat ice cream on Fridays.

More ice-cream recipes:

Honey-Lavender Ice Cream
Stem Ginger, Fresh Mint, and Other Unusual Ice Cream Combinations
Lime Sorbet

Also, whatever happened to Dolly Madison ice cream?

. . .

Some years back our VGS also spent a year at the Massachusetts l’Abri; I found him in their photo gallery, standing around in the kitchen there much as he’s stood around in our kitchen here all summer long, engaged in idle jesting before proceeding to wash the dishes.

For him the time at l’Abri was both a catalyst and the narrowing of a search process which led him at length to reception into the Catholic Church and serious consideration of a vocation to the monastic life. That’s really what his summer with us has been about. His ostensible purpose in coming was to do some intensive Latin study, to fulfill the language requirement for his M.A. in English. This he has done with enviable discipline, in the midst of our daily household chaos.

More than that, though, and more even than the prospect of being near our neighboring Benedictines, he wanted to develop a fuller habit of daily prayer, and that’s difficult to do alone. A culture of one isn’t much of a culture. A solitary table blessing, for instance, is not the same thing as a blessing prayed in chorus with other voices. His being with us has spurred us to greater intentionality in our own common prayer, and to a greater awareness of our home as a monastic place, with rhythms of turning together, like a stand of sunflowers, towards the Great Sun as the created one moves across the sky. Whatever we might have done for him, in giving him a place under our roof from three months, has been returned to us a hundredfold and more.

It was with this kind of thing in mind that we fell in love with the house we now live in, and went out on a limb to buy it: more than simply room for our family, we wanted room for hospitality, with the intent to nurture Christian culture a little, with people other than ourselves sometimes, as we’re given the grace to do it: Morning Prayer, the Angelus, the Rosary; feast days; Mass-, Confession-, and Adoration-going; a shared Friday sacrifice to remind us of Christ’s work on the Cross.

Not to mention that whole Cross-motif thing.

In light of all this, you might like to read T.S. Eliot’s Christianity and Culture, which has had something to do with why we are the way we are.

Also this essay by Robert Louis Wilken, which I read in our first year of homeschooling, and which shed light on why, exactly, we were doing what we were doing, and where we might be going with it.

Anyway, because even on Friday there’s rejoicing in heaven, I think we’ll have some ice cream.


Thursday, August 6, 2009, 2:05 PM
Sally Thomas

I know, I know. It’s a little early to be thinking about UNIQUE Religious Catholic Advent Calendars.

This one is noteworthy, however, in that it gives away, immediately, what it is you await with intense longing all through Advent.

Forget the prophetic allusions. Forget the O Antiphons. Forget putting up the Nativity set and hiding the most important figure till midnight Christmas Eve.

Forget all that.

I really wonder why they even bothered to put doors.

Bidding ends on the feast of Saint Augustine, August 28.

Rating: -22 out of 100

Don’t you mess with my Advent.


Thursday, August 6, 2009, 8:00 AM
Joseph Bottum

So let’s continue our redecoration of Sally’s House with crosses. The picture I thought I had found of the house yesterday turned out to be her old house; her new one is much lovelier.

And lovelier still, will it be, when we’re done?

For the living room, we already have a sofa and chairs, window curtains, a throw pillow, and a coffee table.

Thanks to some readers’ suggestions and a few Internet searches, here’s another good coffee table:

crucifix-table-2

End tables:

cross-table-tna-design-studio-2

With a table lamp for one side of the sofa:

h13451

(What are those yellow hanging things? Lucky Rabbit’s Feet?)

and another table lamp for the other side:

RGA374__1

A wall mirror:

34091

A wall clock:

crucifix

Over at the First Thoughts blog, Joe Carter had found a lounge chair, but I think I like this one better—more truly incapable of supporting a lounging human being:

6a00d8341c8ec853ef01053692c0f0970c-800wi

Add a couple vases:

CROSS VASE Q0012_2_L

and we’re set: an entirely cruciform living room.

Two things struck me while searching for Sally’s items.

The first is that nearly all the objects are tacky—but, at least for these living-room furnishings, the tackiness comes mostly from the hipster, would-be artiste end of things. Mockers of Christianity, for the most part—although all of them, as artistes, claim that some deep thought is instanced in their work.

Look at that sofa, for instance. And the coffee table, and the end tables, and the lounge chair, and the other lounge chair. Look at the vase, for that matter.

There’s an easy moral equivalence, of course: A remarkably similar point is being made by both the objects marketed to a perceived audience of naive and vulgar believers and the objects marketed to perceived audience of ironic and sophisticated non-believers. And that point is that the Cross means something.

As it happens, the meaning for the believers is larger; it’s metaphysical and religious, while the meaning for the non-believers is, at most, historical and political. But this has the curious result of making the non-believers’ ironic use of cross shapes more inclusive, for the irony can encompass almost any Christian object. This is the pattern, for example, that Sally and I have both seen with buyers on Ebay purchasing old religious objects—relics and altarware, typically—for display in their homes: often genuinely beautiful antiques, thickened, for their purchasers, with the irony of their origins.

Thus, for a wide range of the cruciform furnishings I’ve been finding in this game of “Decorate Sally’s House,” the object must come from the ironic non-believers: Given their sense of the divine expressed in the cross symbol, believers simply aren’t going to make things, for instance, like those lounge chairs, in which the user assumes the position of Christ.

The second thought that occurred to me involved the fact that it was difficult to find all these objects, until I realized that searching for “crucifix furniture” was better than searching for “cross furniture.”

Didn’t see any crucifixes in what I posted, did you? The misuse of the word crucifix to mean cross is interestingly widespread these days—and it may reflect, I think, the extent to which Mainline Protestantism has declined and Catholicism taken its place as at least the visual and artistic image of Christianity in America.

But more on that later. In the meantime, my actual desire to purchase any of these cruciform living-room objects is pretty low.

[Ranking: 12 out of 100]


Wednesday, August 5, 2009, 2:04 PM
Sally Thomas

Here’s Calvin Praying.

Yeah, until I looked at it closely, through bifocals, I too thought they meant John Calvin.

Bidding ends August 20.

Rating: 6 out of 100


Wednesday, August 5, 2009, 9:51 AM
Sally Thomas

I think we’ve found a kindred spirit in Bad Vestments.

I mean, so to speak. I don’t know who this tree-wearing lady might be.

Keep up the good bad work.


Wednesday, August 5, 2009, 9:50 AM
Sally Thomas

Darn if I don’t think of hair in the bathtub.

from Womenspirit.com

Rating: 3 out of 100

P.S. Don’t tell me that rating is generous. Don’t tell me it’s mean. I spun the wheel, and that’s what it landed on.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »